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Donnerstag, 16.05.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001
Come January 2012, passengers arriving at any of Taiwan’s three main airports will no longer have to wait and stand in long queues at the immigration control thanks to the new “E-gate” system that promises to speed up passenger clearance to roughly 12 seconds per individual.

Once the system is inaugurated, passengers who register their biometric data in advance will be able to avoid long queues by using the automated immigration gates at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport, Taipei Songshan Airport and Kaohsiung International Airport.

130,000 people have already registered since its trial run, and the National Immigration Agency (NIA) expects the number to grow to one million by the end of next year.

Weiterlesen: Taiwan to launch automated immigration gates in 2012

E-gates are set to be officially launched at Taiwan’s three main airports Jan. 1, 2012, helping to speed up passenger clearance at immigration control to roughly 12 seconds per individual.

When the system is inaugurated, passengers who register their biometric data in advance will be able to avoid long lines by using the automated immigration gates at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport, Taipei Songshan Airport and Kaohsiung International Airport.

Weiterlesen: E-gates to open at Taiwan’s major airports from start of next year

The government is planning to implement a new stage of its e-government project within five years that will integrate government information and services, Vice Premier Sean Chen said Wednesday.

The fourth phase of the program has been approved and is expected to be carried out between 2012 and 2016 with a budget of nearly NT$8.5 billion (US$280 million), Chen said at the 45th annual conference of the International Council for Information Technology in Government Administration (ICA), which opened that day in Taipei.

Weiterlesen: TW: New e-government scheme to be rolled out over next five years

New Taipei City Mayor Eric Liluan Chu gathers with ICF Chairman as well as relevant experts and scholars for experience and vision sharing

Intelligent City Forum of New Taipei City took place today. John G. Jung, Chairman and co-founder of the Intelligent Community Forum (ICF), Brenda Halloran, Mayor of the City of Waterloo, and Steve Reneker, Chief Information Officer of the City of Riverside met with New Taipei City Mayor Eric Liluan Chu to share their experience in intelligent and future city development. Waterloo is a city in Ontario, Canada, and was named to the world's top intelligent community for 2007. Riverside is in California and has been named to the ICF's Top Seven Intelligent Communities for three consecutive years. The forum gathers more than 200 local and overseas participants to help develop New Taipei City into a more intelligent city.

Weiterlesen: TW: Intelligent City Forum of New Taipei City Creates New Milestone for Intelligent City Development

Taipei City Government’s official open data portal, data.taipei.gov.tw, has been made live.

The City Government has been building mobile Apps for residents and visitors since last year, covering areas such as city administration, transportation and tourism. And now the portal becomes the unified access point for the public to use government open data.

The data sets will be made available in batches. Chang Chia-sheng, Commissioner for IT of Taipei City Government, explains to FutureGov that the selection criteria for the first bath include:

  1. focus mainly on data which city residents could use
  2. mainly information that has already been open for citizens to enquire free of charge
  3. focus on the data sets which have been formatted for easy export.

Weiterlesen: TW: Taipei launches open govt portal

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